Khaleej Times

Gulf states may arm Syrian rebels: US

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washington — The collapse of the latest Syria ceasefire has heightened the possibilit­y that Gulf states might arm Syrian rebels with shoulder-fired missiles to defend themselves against Syrian and Russian warplanes, US officials said on Monday.

Still, the US administra­tion continues to maintain that negotiatio­ns are the only way to end the carnage after Russian-backed Syrian forces intensifie­d their bombing of Aleppo, the last major urban area in rebel hands.

The latest US attempt to end Syria’s 5-1/2 year civil war was shattered on September 19 when a humanitari­an aid convoy was bombed in an attack Washington blamed on Russian aircraft. Moscow denied involvemen­t.

On Monday, medical supplies were running out in rebel-held eastern Aleppo, with victims pouring into barely functionin­g hospitals as Russia and its Syrian ally President Bashar Al Assad ignored Western pleas to stop the bombing.

One consequenc­e of the latest diplomatic failure may be that Gulf Arab states or Turkey could step up arms supplies to rebel factions, including shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles, something the United States has largely prevented until now. One US official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said Washington has kept large numbers of such man-portable air defence systems, or MANPADS, out of Syria by uniting Western and Arab allies behind channeling training and infantry weapons to moderate opposition groups while it pursued talks with Moscow.

But frustratio­n with Washington has intensifie­d, raising the possibilit­y that Gulf allies or Turkey will no longer continue to follow the US lead or will turn a blind eye to wealthy individual­s looking to supply MANPADS to opposition groups.

“The Saudis have always thought that the way to get the Russians to back off is what worked in Afghanista­n 30 years ago — negating their air power by giving MANPADS to the mujahideen,” said a second US official.

“So far, we’ve been able to convince them that the risks of that are much higher today because we’re not dealing with a Soviet Union in retreat, but a Russian leader who’s bent on rebuilding Russian power and less likely to flinch,” this official said, referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Asked if the United States was willing to do anything beyond negotiatio­ns to try to stop the violence, State Department spokesman Mark Toner did not outline other steps, but stressed that Wash-

35 doctors remained to care for at least 250,000 people in the eastern aleppo

WHO is calling for the immediate establishm­ent of humanitari­an routes to evacuate sick and wounded from the eastern part of aleppo Fadela Chaib, WHO spokesman

ington does not want to see anyone pouring more weapons into the conflict.

“What you would have as a result is just an escalation in what is already horrific fighting,” Toner said. “Things could go from bad to much worse.”

Another administra­tion official, however, said, “The opposition has a right to defend itself and they will not be left defenceles­s in the face of this indiscrimi­nate bombardmen­t.”

Speaking on condition of anonymity, the official noted that other US “allies and partners” have been involved in the US-Russian talks to find a resolution to the war. “We don’t believe they will take lightly to the kind of outrages we’ve seen in the last 72 hours,” said the administra­tion official, who added that he would not comment on “the specific capability that might be brought into the fight.” He declined to elaborate.

Critics of US President Barack Obama, who has sought to avoid getting into another Middle East war and seems unlikely to do so in his final months, argued that US diplomacy has been hamstrung by the White House’s reluctance to use force.

“Diplomacy in the absence of leverage is a recipe for failure,” Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham, Republican critics of the Democratic White House, said in a statement.

“Putin and Assad will not do what we ask of them out of the goodness of their hearts, or out of concern for our interests, or the suffering of others. They must be compelled, and that requires power,” they added. “Until the United States is willing to take steps to change the conditions on the ground in Syria, the war, the terror, the refugees, and the instabilit­y will all continue.”

White House spokesman Josh Earnest accused the Russians of targeting the civilian water supply of eastern Aleppo used by refugee camps, aid convoys, and the White Helmets, a civilian group that seeks to rescue victims of air strikes. —

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 ?? Reuters ?? A convoy carrying food and humanitari­an supplies waits to deliver aid to Syrian besieged towns, near Damascus. —
Reuters A convoy carrying food and humanitari­an supplies waits to deliver aid to Syrian besieged towns, near Damascus. —

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